​John is a history professor who I see at my local tavern now and then.

He just did a 6 part podcast called Reality University. You can get it on
ITunes or here: ​http://www.thejohnrobson.com/podcasts/
I've only listened to the first 2 parts so far. And It very interesting.

Bear


It happened today – June 12, 2015

[image: Ronald Reagan at the Wall]
On June 12, 1987, Ronald Reagan challenged Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
to tear down the Berlin Wall. Two years later, it fell, and Communism
crumbled, a marvelous demonstration of the power of stating the obvious.

Reagan had that talent to a truly remarkable degree. To his enemies he was
simplistic, indeed a simpleton. To his admirers he was clear. In fairness
he did sometimes oscillate between them. But the more the Gipper moves from
the heat of partisan confrontation to the light of historical perspective
the more we see that the clarity prevailed.

Reagan himself was infuriatingly unconcerned with criticism; Florence King
once described him as “contemptuous of contempt” which I think is a useful
political attribute for resisting conventional wisdom. But he was not
arrogant. He could laugh at himself, a useful quality that enhances one’s
common sense. And common sense is something Reagan had in abundance. He
didn’t believe in people working themselves into exhaustion (as he once
characteristically joked “It’s true hard work never killed anybody, but I
figure, why take the chance?”) and he was not led by sophistry into
overlooking the obvious. Including when it came to communism.

Reagan never forgot that central planning didn’t work. He wasn’t buffaloed
by econometrics into believing the Soviet economy was a success. He knew it
wasn’t, and he was proved right where others were contemptuously and
contemptibly wrong. As George Orwell once said, “To see what is in front of
one’s nose requires a constant struggle.” It was a task Reagan managed and
his sophisticated critics did not.

In a June 1982 speech to the British Parliament, “sounding a bit
delusional” as his *Ottawa Citizen* obituary would later put it, he said
“the march of freedom and democracy” would “leave Marxist-Leninism on the
ash heap of history.” Now it is characteristic of Reagan that he was
mischievously paraphrasing Trotsky who had memorably consigned his
Menshevik opponents (and former colleagues) to the garbage dump of history.
Reagan’s critics, who didn’t think he had ever read a book, typically
missed this pointed thrust.

Those critics were even more shocked when in 1983 Reagan called the Soviet
Union an evil empire. New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis declared the
speech ‘simplistic,’ ‘sectarian,’ ‘dangerous,’ ‘outrageous’ and “primitive”
while distinguished historian Henry Steele Commager called it “the worst
presidential speech in American history.” And yet it was the plain truth.
And it worked.

In 1987, again in characteristic Reagan style, he stood before the
Brandenberg Gate and challenged the much-admired “reformer” Mikhail
Gorbachev, saying “Secretary General Gorbachev, if you seek peace–if you
seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe–if you seek
liberalization: come here, to this gate. Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate. Mr.
Gorbachev, tear down this wall.”

Again, puckishly, Reagan was invoking Pink Floyd’s wildly successful 1979
album *The Wall
<http://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B004ZN9W5M/ref=as_li_tf_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=15121&creative=330641&creativeASIN=B004ZN9W5M&linkCode=as2&tag=johnrobsononl-20>*,
subtly mocking critics who considered him out of touch. But he was also
articulating a basic truth in a clear and compelling way.

As he knew perfectly well, tearing down the wall would doom communism. The
Berlin Wall was built on a lie, a transparent lie, that it was intended to
keep spies and infiltrators out, to stop the movement of bad people east.
In fact it was intended to keep the enslaved population of Eastern Europe
trapped, to stop the movement of good people west. And for years,
especially given the wave of self-doubt that engulfed the West from the
1960s on, it became fashionable to see a moral and geopolitical equivalence
between East and West, to ignore or downplay this basic truth.

There were always some who saw it including within the Soviet Union. During
debates over the “Jackson-Vanik Amendment” in the Nixon years which
basically insisted on free emigration from the U.S.S.R. in return for trade
liberalization (don’t ask for details unless you want a drink from a fire
hydrant as I wrote my PhD on it), there was a Soviet joke about premier
Aleksei Kosygin asking Communist Party chairman Leonid Brezhnev why they
didn’t allow free emigration. Brezhnev says “Well, I would, Aleksei, but
I’m afraid we’d be the only two left.” Kosygin looks at him in puzzlement
and says “You and who else?”

Reagan understood that. And he understood the power of simple truths
plainly spoken. And once he challenged Gorbachev and the scoffing stopped,
everyone including liberalizers within the Soviet empire asked well, why
don’t you? And when they did, in 1989, communism collapsed into an
ignominious heap of polluted rust.

Now to be sure the Soviet system was far weaker by 1987 than it had been
in, say, 1967. Its “internal contradictions,” as Marx liked to call such
things, had caught up with it. Reagan was in the right place at the right
time. But he knew it because of the clarity of his vision, and he knew what
to say and do.

As he told Richard Allen in 1977, “My theory of the Cold War is that we win
and they lose.” It was appallingly simplistic and reactionary. And it
worked. Maybe it’s worth trying again.

http://www.thejohnrobson.com/2015/06/12/it-happened-today-june-12-2015/?shared=email&msg=fail

-- 
-- 
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"PoliticalForum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to